Diarrhea, fever, and weight loss are symptoms of Crohn’s disease. Crohn’s disease is a chronical inflammation of the digestive tract. The cause of this disease is still unknown.…
Each form of Inflammatory Bowel Disease takes in the digestive tract is very distinct. Ulcerative Colitis tends to be continuous throughout the inflamed areas. In many cases, Ulcerative Colitis begins in the rectum or sigmoid colon and spreads up though the colon as the disease progresses. In Crohn’s Disease, the inflammation may occur in patches in one or more organs with in the digestive system. For example, a diseased section of colon may appear between two healthy sections.…
Clay-colored stool indicates the absence of bile in the stool, which may be seen in clients with cirrhosis or cholecystitis.…
Coronary heart disease (CHD) is a term used to describe what happens when the blood supply to the heart is blocked or interrupted by a build up of fatty substances in the coronary arteries. CHD is a preventable disease that can be treated.…
Both Crohn's disease and ulcerative colitis may be defined as an aspect of inflammatory bowel disease or IBD. Both are believed – in some ways more than others - to belinked to genetics, environmental factors and lifestyle, as well as immune system dysfunction.…
Crohn's disease affects an individual's immune system by making it weaker and unable for the immune cells to attack the foreign viruses and bacteria. It can begin with taking antibiotics that depletate the natural bacteria in the body, resulting in an increased resistance to the point of which the immune cells take down both the good and bad bacteria until the resistance becomes too strong, and the body is unable to protect itself from either. The inflammation results in diarrhea, fatigue, vomiting, and fibrosis.…
Crohn’s Disease (CD) is a chronic, intermittent inflammatory, autoimmune disease that can affect any part of the gastrointestinal (GI) tract from the mouth to the anus. CD is most commonly diagnosed in the small and large intestines. It is idiopathic in origin and is characterized by a variety of symptoms. Patients frequently present with severe abdominal pain, diarrhea and rectal bleeding. There is no one test available that can diagnose CD therefore it may take some time to obtain a correct diagnosis.…
In the essay Too Many Bananas, Not Enough Pineapples, and No Watermelon at All: Three Object Lessons in Living with Reciprocity by David Counts, there is a misunderstanding between cultures about the rules of sharing. The events in David Counts's essay were humorous anecdotes about fruit. Unfortunately for the ! Kung people, differing ideas of sharing can sometimes be catastrophic for a culture. The previous social interactions of the !…
C. Crohn’s Disease mainly affects the end of the small bowel and the beginning of the colon, but occasionally it affects parts of the gastrointestinal tract anywhere from the mouth to the anus.…
Schmelzer, & F. Verville (2014) describe the pathophysiology of Crohns as inflammation of segment of the GI tract (most commonly in terminal ilieu and colon). The inflammation involves the mucosa, submucosa and muscularis layers of the intestinal wall. Adversely diseased portions occur between normal portions of the bowls. The diseased portions can contain deep ulcerations that penetrate through edematous mucosa where thickening of the bowel wall and narrowing of the lumen occur where abscesses, fistulas lesions may development (Schmelzer, & F. Verville,…
Crohn’s disease is one of the fastest growing intestinal disease in the United States. You may ask, “who can get Crohn’s disease?”. Anyone can get Crohn’s disease but it is more common for a woman rather than a man to get it. It has affected more than five hundred thousand people in the United States alone, that is about one for every seven people in the United States. Crohn’s has common symptoms of a cold such as abdominal pains, fever, and diarrhea, it also has many more symptoms. Crohn’s can affect any part of the GI tract, though, usually occurs at the end of the small intestine (ileum) and the beginning of the large intestine (colon). Some people may ask, How do people get Crohn’s disease? or, How does someone get rid of Crohn’s disease? or maybe even, What is the difference between irritable bowel syndrome and Crohn’s disease?…
One day in 1932, a man by the name of Dr. Burrill Bernard Crohn and his team founded a disease that we have now known as Crohn’s disease. (The Secret History of Crohn’s Disease) Dr. Crohn didn’t know much about the cause and development of Crohn’s back then, and it still seems to be that way today. There has been a great amount of improvement on discovering the source of Crohn’s, but there is still much to be done. More research and funding need to be put towards Crohn’s disease in order to find an exact cause of the disease. If we make this possible, then those affected by this disease can have research put towards their genetics and lifestyles, so that they might have a chance at living a better, easier life.…
The effect that crohn's disease may have on one's immune system can be seen in the gastrointestinal tract. When one has a triggering event of some sort like an infection, it causes the body's immune response in the GI tract to become confused. Something like food or good bacteria in the intestines are then seen as a threat to the body. The body begins to attack these "foreign" bacteria, creating an excess of white blood cells. This excess of white blood cells in the intestines is what causes the great deal of inflammation. The other harmful side of this is the bi-products of the white blood cells could be harmful to the body, possibly causing…
History: Crohn 's disease is an inflammatory bowel disease of an undetermined cause that afflicts more than five-hundred thousand people in the United States and is not biased in regards to which it strikes. People unlucky enough to get Crohn 's Disease include the old and young; rich as well as poor; men, women, and children of white, black, and Asian descent; the disease does not discriminate against age, social class, gender or color. Crohn 's primarily attacks the digestive system in the areas of the ileum, which is part of the small intestine and the large intestine (also known as the colon), but can occur in any section of the gastrointestinal tract. Although Crohn 's disease afflicts all age groups, initial diagnosis generally occurs before the age of thirty.…
Ulcerative colitis (UC) is a disease where the bowels are inflamed and have sores, called ulcers. It affects the rectum and variable amounts of the large bowel (or intestine). Approximately 1 in 100 people are affected by UC. It is not an infectious illness. Evidence shows a genetic factor to be involved. Familial occurrence is high and most common in Caucasians. Researchers suspect that the immune system is involved. The cause of this disease is truly unknown. People with UC also have manifestations of iritis, ankylosing spondylitis, arthritis, and nephrolithiasis. In studying will find that there are many similarities between Crohn’s and UC. The clinical presentation can overlap, so a good H&P is needed to proceed with diagnosing the patient. But even so, in around 10% of cases, it is not possible for doctors to distinguish between colitis and Crohns disease. (Gould, 2006)…